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1.
Rat ovarian granulosa cells synthesize two distinct species of plasma membrane-intercalated heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans; glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored and core protein-intercalated HS proteoglycans. Both species of HS proteoglycans are primarily localized on the plasma membrane. Cell surface localization of GPI-anchored and protein-intercalated HS proteoglycans can be determined by their accessibility to exogenously added phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) and trypsin, respectively. Kinetic parameters for the processes involving their transfer from the Golgi to the cell surface, endocytosis and secretion, and the modes of intracellular degradation were determined by metabolic labeling experiments using [35S]sulfate and various chase protocols in combination with the use of PI-PLC and trypsin in rat ovarian granulosa cells. The experiments demonstrated that (i) both HS proteoglycan species are transferred from the Golgi to the cell surface with an average transit time of approximately 12 min. (ii) GPI-anchored HS proteoglycans are endocytosed with a t1/2 approximately 3 h, without being shed into the medium, and they are rapidly degraded, t1/2 approximately 25 min, without generating recognizable degradation intermediates. (iii) Protein-intercalated HS proteoglycans are partly (approximately 30%) shed from the cell surface into the medium and the remaining approximately 70% are endocytosed with a t1/2 approximately 4 h. After endocytosis, they undergo a slow (t1/2 approximately 4 h) stepwise degradation generating distinct HS oligosaccharides as degradation intermediates. These results indicate that the GPI-anchored and the protein-intercalated HS proteoglycans have distinct secretory, endocytotic, and intracellular degradation pathways probably due to the differences in their anchor structures.  相似文献   

2.
Degradative processing of internalized insulin in isolated adipocytes   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Based on the distribution of 125I-insulin between the cell surface and the cell interior, it was found that insulin rapidly binds (t 1/2 = 0.4 min) to surface receptors at 37 degrees C, and after an initial lag period of about 1 min, accumulates intracellularly until steady state is reached (t 1/2 = 3.5 min). At this time about 40% of the total cell-associated 125I-insulin resides in the cell interior reflecting a dynamic equilibrium between the rate of insulin endocytosis and the rate at which internalized insulin is processed and extruded from cells. Since this percentage decreased to 15% at 16 degrees C, it appears that internalization is more temperative-sensitive than the intracellular processing of insulin. When 125I-insulin was preloaded into the cell interior, it was found that internalized insulin was rapidly released to the medium at 37 degrees C (t 1/2 = 6.5 min) and consisted of both degraded products and intact insulin (as assessed by trichloroacetic acid precipitability and column chromatography). Since 75% of internalized insulin was ultimately degraded, and 25% was released intact, this indicates that degradation is the predominant pathway. To determine when incoming insulin enters a degradative compartment, cells were continually exposed to 125I-insulin and the composition of insulin in the cell interior over time was assessed. After 2 min all endocytosed insulin was intact, between 2-3 min degradation products began accumulating intracellularly, and by 15 min equilibrium was reached with 20% of internalized insulin consisting of degraded products. Degraded insulin was then released from the cell interior within 4-5 min after endocytotic uptake, since this was the earliest time chloroquine was found to inhibit the release of degradation products. Moreover, the final release of degraded insulin was not inhibitable by the energy depleter dinitrophenol. Thus, within the degradative pathway, insulin enters lysosomes by 2.5-3 min and is released to the medium by simple diffusion after an additional 1.5-2 min.  相似文献   

3.
A rat parathyroid cell line, with some differentiated properties of the parathyroid gland, synthesizes predominantly a heparan sulphate proteoglycan (HS-PG) typical of cell surface HS-PGs (core protein = approximately 70 kDa, three to four HS chains of approximately 30 kDa). A 10 min pulse-chase protocol was used to determine the metabolic fate of the HS-PGs for cells maintained in 2.1 mM-Ca2+ (high Ca) or in 0.05 mM-Ca2+ (low Ca). In low Ca, approximately 60% of the labelled HS-PGs reach the cell surface (t1/2 = approximately 15 min) as determined by trypsin accessibility. This population of HS-PGs recycles (t1/2 = approximately 9 min) between the cell surface and an intracellular (presumably endosome) compartment. After approximately 2 h, this population of HS-PGs is internalized and rapidly degraded in lysosomes. In high Ca, only approximately 10% of the HS-PGs reach the cell surface, where they do not recycle. Changing from high to low Ca any time between 30-120 min of chase, rapidly (t1/2 less than 4 min) redistributes the HS-PGs to the cell surface where they begin recycling; conversely, changing from low to high Ca leads to a rapid sequestration of the cell surface HS-PGs within the cells. Other divalent cations fail to mimic the response to Ca2+. The results suggest that most of the HS-PGs in this cell line are anchored in a membrane compartment involved in a transport process between endosomes and the cell surface which is regulated by the concentration of extracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

4.
Rat ovarian granulosa cells, isolated from immature female rats 48 h after stimulation with 5 IU of pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin, were maintained in culture. The effects of monensin, a monovalent cationic ionophore, on various aspects of proteoglycan metabolism were studied by metabolically labeling cultures with [35S]sulfate, [3H]glucosamine, or [3H]glucose. Monensin inhibited post-translational modification of both heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans and dermatan sulfate (DS) proteoglycans, resulting in decreased synthesis of completed proteoglycans [( 35S]sulfate incorporation decreased to 10% of control by 30 microM monensin, with an ED50 approximately 1 microM). Proteoglycans synthesized in the presence of monensin showed undersulfation of both DS and HS glycosaminoglycans and altered N-linked and O-linked oligosaccharides, suggesting that the processing of all sugar moieties is closely associated. Monensin caused a decrease in the endogenous sugar supply to the UDP-N-acetylhexosamine pool as indicated by an increased 3H incorporation into DS chains [( 3H]glucosamine as precursor) in spite of the decrease in glycosaminoglycan synthesis. Monensin reduced and delayed transport of both secretory and membrane-associated proteoglycans from the Golgi complex to the cell surface. It took 2-4 min for newly labeled proteoglycans to reach the main transport process inhibited by monensin. Monensin at 30 microM did not prevent internalization of cell surface 35S-labeled proteoglycans but almost completely inhibited their intracellular degradation to free [35S]sulfate (ED50 approximately 1 microM), resulting in intracellular accumulation of both DS and HS proteoglycans. Pulse-chase experiments demonstrated that one of the intracellular degradation pathways involving proteolysis of both DS and HS proteoglycans and limited endoglycosidic cleavage of HS continued to operate in the presence of monensin. These results suggest that the intracellular degradation of proteoglycans involve both acidic and nonacidic compartments with monensin inhibiting those processes that normally occur in such acidic compartments as endosomes or lysosomes by raising their pH.  相似文献   

5.
Previous work (Yanagishita, M., and Hascall, V. C. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 10270-10283) has indicated that heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans in rat ovarian granulosa cells are degraded by two kinetically distinct pathways. Pathway 1 degrades proteoglycans rapidly with a t 1/2 approximately 25 min without generating appreciable degradative intermediates. Pathway 2 degrades proteoglycans more slowly with a t 1/2 approximately 4 h, generating distinct degradative intermediates: single HS chains of Mr = approximately 10,000 and approximately 5,000. Effects of leupeptin, an inhibitor of thiol proteases, on the intracellular degradation of proteoglycans in the rat ovarian granulosa cell culture were examined using various chase protocols after labeling cells with [35S]sulfate. The presence of leupeptin at 100 micrograms/ml in the culture medium inhibited the intracellular degradation of proteoglycans by approximately 80% during a 7-h chase period after a 20-h labeling. Leupeptin affected neither the cellular content nor the in vitro activities of beta-hexosaminidase and arylsulfatase. Structural analyses of heparan sulfate species in leupeptin-treated cells demonstrated that the drug inhibited the degradation of HS proteoglycans at two distinct points. First, degradation of the core protein was partially inhibited and delayed before the start of glycosaminoglycan degradation. This resulted in the accumulation of degradative intermediates with partially degraded core proteins bearing intact glycosaminoglycan chains. This establishes the initial sequence for HS proteoglycan degradation, with proteolysis preceding endoglycosidase digestion, and suggests that these two degradation steps may occur in physically separate compartments. Second, the final depolymerization of HS fragments through pathway 2 was totally inhibited, resulting in the continuous accumulation of Mr = 5,000 HS chains. This is not due to the direct inhibition of the lysosomal exoglycosidase and sulfatase enzymes responsible for the complete depolymerization of HS chains, since pathway 1, while slowed, continued to completely depolymerize the HS chains in the presence of leupeptin. The results suggest that the intracellular compartment which completely degrades heparan sulfate chains is separate from those containing partially, endoglycosidically processed heparan sulfate chains and that leupeptin interfered with the translocation of glycosaminoglycans to the final degradation site.  相似文献   

6.
The regulation of the cellular distribution of proteoglycans in a clonal rat parathyroid cell line by extracellular Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]e) was studied. Proteoglycans synthesized by the cells metabolically labeled with [35S]sulfate have been shown to be almost exclusively heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans (Yanagishita, M., Brandi, M.L., and Sakaguchi, K. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 15714-15720), which are generally associated with the plasma membrane. The proportion of HS proteoglycans on the cell surface was approximately 20% in 2.1 mM (high) [Ca2+]e, whereas it increased to 50-60% in 0.05 mM (low) [Ca2+]e. Cell-associated HS proteoglycans redistribute in response to changing [Ca2+]e with a t 1/2 less than 4 min; HS proteoglycans appear on the cell surface as [Ca2+]e decreases and disappear from the cell surface as [Ca2+]e increases. Further, HS proteoglycans on the cell surface recycle to and from an intracellular compartment approximately 10 times before their degradation in low [Ca2+]e but do not recycle in high [Ca2+]e. The distribution of newly synthesized HS proteoglycans is regulated by [Ca2+]e but is independent of [Ca2+]e during biosynthesis. In low [Ca2+]e, at least 50% of the HS proteoglycans pulse-labeled for 10 min are transported from the Golgi complex to the cell surface or to the recycling compartment with a t 1/2 of approximately 20 min. Another approximately 10% appear on the cell surface in either low or high [Ca2+]e in a compartment with a long half-life. Addition of Mg2+ or Ba2+ to the low [Ca2+]e cultures had little effect on the distribution of HS proteoglycans. These observations suggest that [Ca2+]e specifically regulates the distribution and recycling of cell-associated HS proteoglycans in the parathyroid cells.  相似文献   

7.
After 24 h of continuous labeling with radioactive precursors, a high molecular weight heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HS-PG) was isolated from both the medium and cell layer of human colon carcinoma cells (WiDr) in culture. The medium HS-PG eluted from a diethylaminoethyl anion exchange column with 0.45-0.50 M NaCl, had an average density of 1.46-1.49 g/ml on dissociative CsCl density-gradient ultracentrifugation, and eluted from Sepharose CL-2B with a Kav = 0.57. This proteoglycan had an estimated Mr of congruent to 8.5 X 10(5), with glycosaminoglycan chains of Mr = 3 X 10(4) which were all susceptible to HNO2 deaminative cleavage. Deglycosylation of the HS-PG with polyhydrogen fluoride resulted in a 3H-core protein with Mr congruent to 2.4 X 10(5). The cell layer contained a population of HS-PG with characteristics almost identical to that released into the medium but with a larger Mr = 9.5 X 10(5). Furthermore, an intracellular pool contained smaller heparan sulfate chains (Mr congruent to 1 X 10(4)) which were mostly devoid of protein core. In pulse chase experiments, only the large cell-associated HS-PG was released (approximately 58%) into the medium as intact proteoglycan and/or internalized and degraded (approximately 42%), with a t1/2 = 6 h. However, the small intracellular component was never released into the medium and was degraded at a much slower rate. When the cells were subjected to mild proteolytic treatment, only the large cell-associated HS-PG, but none of the small component, was displaced. Addition of exogenous heparin did not displace any HS-PG into the medium. Both light and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry revealed that the cell surface reacted with antibody against an HS-PG isolated from a basement membrane-producing tumor. Electron microscopic histochemistry using ruthenium red and/or cuprolinic blue revealed numerous 10-50-nm diam granules and 70-220-nm-long electron-dense filaments, respectively, on the surface of the tumor cells. The results indicate that colon carcinoma cells synthesize HS-PGs with distinct structural and metabolic characteristics: a large secretory pool with high turnover, which appears to be synthesized as an integral membrane component and localized primarily at the cell surface, and a small nonsecretory pool with low turnover localized predominantly within the cell interior. This culture system offers an opportunity to investigate in detail the mechanisms involved in the regulation of proteoglycan metabolism, and in the establishment of the neoplastic phenotype.  相似文献   

8.
The metabolism of heparan sulfate proteoglycan, a major product of human colon carcinoma cells, was investigated in a series of pulse-chase experiments using a combination of quantitative biochemistry and electron microscope autoradiography. This was possible primarily because these cells incorporate [35S]sulfate exclusively into heparan sulfate proteoglycan, thus allowing the possibility of correlating the two sets of information. The results showed a progressive movement of the newly synthesized proteoglycan from the Golgi to the cell surface, where it became closely associated with the plasma membrane and was labeled ultrastructurally by both ruthenium red and radiosulfate. Subsequently, about 55% was released into the medium (t1/2 approximately 2.5 h) where it resided as intact macromolecule and was neither endocytosed nor degraded further. The remaining 45% was internalized and converted into smaller species through a series of degradative steps. Initially (Step 1) there was proteolytic cleavage of the protein core and partial endoglycosidic cleavage of the heparan sulfate chains (t1/2 approximately 6 h), with generation of larger glycosaminoglycan-peptide intermediates with chains of Mr approximately 10,000, about one-third their original size. These components were subsequently converted (Step 2) to yet smaller, limiting fragments of Mr approximately 5,000, which were finally depolymerized (Step 3) with quantitative release of free sulfate. The intracellular degradation of the proteoglycan, particularly Steps 2 and 3, was markedly inhibited by choloroquine, implicating the involvement of acidic compartments in the catabolism of these macromolecules. This was corroborated by the autoradiographic studies which showed the close association of 35S-labeled products with secondary lysosomes. However, the initial degradation of the proteoglycan might have occurred in a prelysosomal compartment since Step 1 was not totally blocked by chloroquine. The combined results indicate that the intracellular degradation of heparan sulfate follows structural as well as functional compartmentalization and provide a model that may be shared by other cell systems.  相似文献   

9.
Equilibrium-binding data of highly purified 125I-labeled avian lipoprotein lipase to cultured avian adipocytes demonstrate the presence of a class of high affinity binding sites. Analysis of the binding function yielded an association constant of 0.62 x 10(8)M-1 and a maximum binding capacity of 2.1 micrograms/60-mm dish. From a time course of dissociation of 125I-lipoprotein lipase from adipocytes at 4 degrees C, a dissociation rate constant of 6.1 x 10(-5)s-1 was obtained. Pretreatment of cells with heparinase and heparitinase resulted in a quantitative suppression of the high affinity binding component, establishing that lipoprotein lipase is bound to cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans. At 37 degrees C, cell surface-bound 125I-lipoprotein lipase is internalized and either degraded or recycled to the medium. The degradation rate constant for 125I-lipoprotein lipase was estimated to be 0.78 h-1. The degradation rate constant was reduced 6-fold when cells were exposed to 100 microM chloroquine, indicating that most of the degradation occurs within the lysosomal compartment. By using cells that had been pulsed with Trans35S-label for 1 h, it was demonstrated that acute treatment with endoglycosidases for up to 1 h resulted in a new lipoprotein lipase secretion rate which was 6-fold higher than that of control cells. Degradation of newly synthesized lipoprotein lipase was essentially blocked 30 min after the initiation of the chase. In other studies it was observed that there were no additive effects of chloroquine and either endoglycosidase or heparin treatment on total lipoprotein lipase levels (intracellular, cell surface, and medium) in adipocyte cultures. These experiments support the hypothesis that the release of lipoprotein lipase from its receptor prevents its internalization and degradation and enhances enzyme efflux from the adipocyte. A new model of lipoprotein lipase secretion in cultured adipocytes is proposed: Newly synthesized lipoprotein lipase is transported to the cell surface where it binds to specific heparan sulfate proteoglycan receptors. The enzyme is either released to the medium or internalized via the receptor, in which case the enzyme is degraded or recycled to the cell surface. Major determinants of enzyme efflux from the cell surface include the number and integrity of receptors, the association constant of the enzyme-receptor complex, and the presence in the medium of competing molecules with high affinity for lipoprotein lipase. In this model, modulation of lipoprotein lipase degradation rate may be a significant mechanism for acute regulation of enzyme efflux independent of changes in the rate of enzyme synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
Cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) participate in the catabolism of many physiologically important ligands. We previously reported that syndecan HSPGs directly mediate endocytosis, independent of coated pits. We now studied perlecan, a major cell surface HSPG genetically distinct from syndecans. Cells expressing perlecan but no other proteoglycans bound, internalized, and degraded atherogenic lipoproteins enriched in lipoprotein lipase. Binding was blocked by heparitinase, and degradation by chloroquine. Antibodies against beta(1) integrins reduced initial ligand binding, consistent with their roles as cell surface attachment sites for perlecan. By several criteria, catabolism via perlecan was distinct from either coated pits or the syndecan pathway. The kinetics of internalization (t(12) = 6 h) and degradation (t(12) approximately 18 h) were remarkably slow, unlike the other pathways. Blockade of the low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein did not slow perlecan-dependent internalization. Internalization via perlecan was inhibited by genistein but unaffected by cytochalasin D, a pattern distinct from coated pits or syndecan-mediated endocytosis. Finally, we examined cooperation between perlecan and low density lipoprotein receptors and found limited synergy. Our results demonstrate that perlecan mediates internalization and lysosomal delivery that is kinetically and biochemically distinct from other known uptake pathways and is consistent with a very slow component of HSPG-dependent ligand processing found in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
The distribution of heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans in clonal rat parathyroid cells is regulated by the extracellular Ca2+ concentration, which is a principal factor for parathyroid cell function (Takeuchi, Y., Sakaguchi, K., Yanagishita, M., Aurbach, G. D., and Hascall, V. C. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 13661-13668). Increasing the concentration of extracellular Ca2+ in the physiological range redistributes HS proteoglycans from the cell surface to an intracellular compartment. We have now examined effects of the extracellular Ca2+ concentration on the metabolism of the HS proteoglycans in detail using [35S]sulfate metabolic labeling-chase experiments. Two distinct metabolic pathways were demonstrated: (i) the intracellular generation of HS chains from HS proteoglycans in prelysosomal compartments followed by their release into the medium (pathway 1), and (ii) intracellular generation of HS oligosaccharides from HS chains in prelysosomal compartments, which are eventually degraded into free sulfate in lysosomes (pathway 2). The HS oligosaccharides were exclusively present within the cells, whereas HS chains were found primarily in the medium. The cells do not internalize either HS proteoglycans or HS chains from the medium. These observations indicate that these two degradation pathways are independent. In addition to these pathways, approximately 15% of the HS proteoglycans were released into the medium as a proteoglycan form. Treatment of cells with chloroquine, a lysosomotropic agent, did not affect generation of HS chains but inhibited conversion of HS chains to HS oligosaccharides or to free sulfate and resulted in the release of HS chains from the cells. The drug did not affect metabolic pathway 1. The extracellular Ca2+ concentration did not alter these intracellular degradation pathways for HS proteoglycans in the parathyroid cells. Thus, extracellular Ca2+ appears to regulate only the distribution of HS proteoglycans between the cell surface and intracellular compartments, and the process of cycling between these compartments when extracellular Ca2+ is low.  相似文献   

12.
We have investigated the dissociation, internalization, and degradation of 125I-interleukin-6 (125I-IL-6) by primary rat hepatocytes. Temperature shift experiments following saturation binding of 125I-IL-6 to cell surface receptors in hepatocytes showed a rapid loss of surface-bound 125I-IL-6 (t1/2 = 15 min), concomitant with a rapid rise in internalized radiolabeled ligand. After reaching a maximum by 30 min at 37 degrees C, the level of internalized 125I-IL-6 decreased with time and appeared in the culture media in a non-trichloroacetic acid-precipitable (degraded) state. The addition of the lysosomotropic agent chloroquine inhibited this receptor-mediated degradation of IL-6 without affecting ligand internalization. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of internalized 125I-IL-6 confirms these results. Additionally, we show that the IL-6.IL-6 receptor complex is stable, and dissociation of these two molecular species occurs at a pH below 5.0. In contrast to published results, data presented in this study clearly indicate that IL-6 is rapidly internalized and degraded within hepatocytes by a receptor-mediated mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
Proteoglycans synthesized in vitro by periovular granulomas isolated from livers of schistosome-infected mice were compared with those produced by granuloma-derived cell lines: the primary cell line GR and the permanent cell line GRX. Proteoglycans were metabolically labelled with 35S-sulfate and extracted with 4 M guanidine-HCl containing 2.0% Triton X-100, in the presence of proteinase inhibitors. The radiolabelled proteoglycans were purified and characterized by anion-exchange, gel-filtration and affinity-column chromatography. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HS-PGs) and chondroitin sulfate/dermatan sulfate-containing proteoglycans (CS/DS-PGs) were detected in both the culture medium and the cell-associated fractions obtained from GR cells. More than 90% of the cell-associated HS-PG from these cells contained a hydrophobic portion, as evidenced by their ability to bind to octyl-Sepharose. In contrast, among the secreted proteoglycans, it was the CS/DS-PG and not the HS-PG that bound to this resin. The major fractions of cell-associated and secreted proteoglycans from GRX cells were HS-PGs. Similar to HS-PGs from GR cells, 50% of the cell-associated HS-PG bound to octyl-Sepharose, while only 20% of secreted proteoglycans (HS-PGs) bound to this resin. The proteoglycans purified from the whole granuloma were composed mainly of DS-PG, of a size and hydrophobicity similar to the CS/DS-PG from GR cells. Possible correlations among the structure, secretion, distribution and function of proteoglycans in granulomatous reactions are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Intracellular transport and degradation of membrane anchored heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) were studied in cultured rat hepatocytes labeled with [35S]sulfate and [3H]glucosamine. Pulse chase experiments showed that membrane anchored HSPGs were constitutively transported to the cell surface after completion of polymerization and modification of the glycosaminoglycan chains in the Golgi apparatus. The intact HSPGs had a relatively short residence time at the cell surface and in non-degrading compartments (T(1/2) approximately 2-3 h), while [35S]sulfate labeled degradation products were found in lysosomes, and to a lesser extent in late endosomes. These degradation products which were free heparan sulfate chains with little or no protein covalently attached, were approximately half the size of the original glycosaminoglycan chains and were the only degradation intermediate found in the course of HSPG catabolism in these cells. In cells incubated in the presence of the microtubule perturbant vinblastine, or in the presence of the vacuolar ATPase inhibitor bafilomycin A1, and in cells incubated at 19 degrees C, the endocytosed HSPGs were retained in endosomes and no degradation products were detected. Disruption of lysosomes with glycyl-phenylalanine 2-naphthylamide (GPN) revealed a GPN resistant degradative compartment with both intact and partially degraded HSPGs. This compartment probably corresponds to late endosomes. Treatment of hepatocytes with the thiol protease inhibitor leupeptin inhibited the final degradation of the protein moiety of the HSPGs. The protein portion seems to be degraded completely before the glycosaminoglycan chains are cleaved. The degradation of the glycosaminoglycan chains is rapid and complete with one observable intermediate.  相似文献   

15.
We have used biochemical and morphological techniques to demonstrate that hepatocytes in the perfused liver bind, internalize, and degrade substantial amounts of murine epidermal growth factor (EGF) via a receptor-mediated process. Before ligand exposure, about 300,000 high-affinity receptors were detectable per cell, displayed no latency, and co-distributed with conventional plasma membrane markers. Cytochemical localization using EGF coupled to horseradish peroxidase (EGF-HRP) revealed that the receptors were distributed along the entire sinusoidal and lateral surfaces of hepatocytes. When saturating concentrations of EGF were perfused through a liver at 35 degrees C, ligand clearance was biphasic with a rapid primary phase of 20,000 molecules/min per cell that dramatically changed at 15-20 min to a slower secondary phase of 2,500 molecules/min per cell. During the primary phase of uptake, approximately 250,000 molecules of EGF and 80% of the total functional receptors were internalized into endocytic vesicles which could be separated from enzyme markers for plasma membranes and lysosomes on sucrose gradients. The ligand pathway was visualized cytochemically 2-25 min after EGF-HRP internalization and a rapid transport from endosomes at the periphery to those in the Golgi apparatus-lysosome region was observed (t 1/2 approximately equal to 7 min). However, no 125I-EGF degradation was detected for at least 20 min. Within 30 min after EGF addition, a steady state was reached which lasted up to 4 h such that (a) the rate of EGF clearance equaled the rate of ligand degradation (2,500 molecules/min per cell); (b) a constant pool of undegraded ligand was maintained in endosomes; and (c) the number of accessible (i.e., cell surface) receptors remained constant at 20% of initial values. By 4 h hepatocytes had internalized and degraded 3 and 2.3 times more EGF, respectively, than the initial number of available receptors, even in the presence of cycloheximide and without substantial loss of receptors. All of these results suggest that EGF receptors are internalized and that their rate of recycling to the surface from intracellular sites is governed by the rate of entry of ligand and/or receptor into lysosomes.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of tunicamycin, an inhibitor of N-linked oligosaccharide biosynthesis, on the synthesis and turnover of proteoglycans were investigated in rat ovarian granulosa cell cultures. The synthesis of proteoglycans was inhibited (40% of the control at 1.6 micrograms/ml tunicamycin) disproportionately to that of general protein synthesis measured by [3H]serine incorporation (80% of control). Proteoglycans synthesized in the presence of tunicamycin lacked N-linked oligosaccharides but contained apparently normal O-linked oligosaccharides. The dermatan sulfate and heparan sulfate chains of the proteoglycans had the same hydrodynamic size as control when analyzed by Sepharose 6B chromatography. However, the disulfated disaccharide content of the dermatan sulfate chains was reduced by tunicamycin in a dose-dependent manner, implying that the N-linked oligosaccharides may be involved in the function of a sulfotransferase which is responsible for sulfation of the iduronic acid residues. When [35S]sulfate and [3H]glucosamine were used as labeling precursors, the ratio of 35S/3H in chondroitin 4-sulfate was reduced to approximately 50% of the control by tunicamycin, indicating that the drug reduced the supply of endogenous sugar to the UDP-N-acetylhexosamine pool. Neither transport of proteoglycans from Golgi to the cell surface nor their turnover from the cell surface (release into the medium, or internalization and subsequent intracellular degradation) was affected by the drug. Addition of mannose 6-phosphate to the culture medium did not alter the proteoglycan turnover. When granulosa cells were treated with cycloheximide, completion of proteoglycan diminished with a t1/2 of approximately 12 min, indicating the time required for depleting the core protein precursor pool. The glycosaminoglycan synthesizing capacity measured by the addition of p-nitrophenyl-beta-xyloside, however, lasted longer (t1/2 of approximately 40 min). Tunicamycin decreased the core protein precursor pool size in parallel to decreased proteoglycan synthesis, both of which were significantly greater than the inhibition of general protein synthesis. This suggests two possibilities: tunicamycin specifically inhibited the synthesis of proteoglycan core protein, or more likely a proportion of the synthesized core protein precursor (approximately 50%) did not become accessible for post-translational modifications, and was possibly routed for premature degradation.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xylopyranoside on glomerular extracellular matrices (glomerular basement membrane and mesangial matrix) proteoglycans was studied. The proteoglycans of rat kidneys were labeled with [35S]sulfate in the presence or absence of beta- xyloside (2.5 mM) by using an isolated organ perfusion system. The proteoglycans from the glomeruli and perfusion medium were isolated and characterized by Sepharose CL-6B chromatography and by their behavior in CsCl density gradients. With xyloside treatment there was a twofold decrease in 35S-labeled macromolecules in the tissues but a twofold increase in those recovered in the medium as compared with the control. The labeled proteoglycans extracted from control kidneys eluted as a single peak with Kav = 0.25 (Mr = approximately 130,000), and approximately 95% of the radioactivity was associated with heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HS-PG), the remainder with chondroitin (or dermatan) sulfate proteoglycan (CS-PG). In the xyloside-treated kidneys, the proteoglycans extracted from the tissue eluted as two peaks, Kav = 0.25 (Mr = approximately 130,000) and 0.41 (Mr = approximately 46,000), which contained approximately 40 and approximately 60% of the total radioactivity, respectively. The first peak contained mostly the HS-PG (approximately 90%) while the second peak had a mixture of HS-PG (approximately 70%) and CS-PG (approximately 30%). In controls, approximately 90% of the radioactivity, mostly HS-PG, was confined to high density fractions of a CsCl density gradient. In contrast, in xyloside experiments, both HS- PG and CS-PG were distributed in variable proportions throughout the gradient. The incorporated 35S activity in the medium of xyloside- treated kidneys was twice that of the controls and had three to four times the amount of free chondroitin (or dermatan) sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains. The data suggest that beta-xyloside inhibits the addition of de novo synthesized glycosaminoglycan chains onto the core protein of proteoglycans and at the same time stimulates the synthesis of chondroitin or dermatan sulfate chains which are mainly discharged into the perfusion medium.  相似文献   

18.
In avian-cultured adipocytes 76% of the newly synthesized lipoprotein lipase is degraded before release into the medium (Cupp, M., Bensadoun, A., and Melford, K. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 6383-6388). The same group (Cisar, L. A., Hoogewerf, A. J., Cupp, M., Rapport, C. A., and Bensadoun, A. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 1767-1774) has proposed that the interaction of lipoprotein lipase with a class of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans is necessary for degradation to occur. To test further this hypothesis, the binding capacity of the plasma membrane for the lipase was decreased by inhibiting the sulfation of glycosaminoglycans with sodium chlorate, an inhibitor of sulfate adenyltransferase. Chlorate decreased sulfate incorporation into trypsin-releasable heparan sulfate proteoglycans to 20% of control levels. The amount of uronic acid in the trypsin-releasable heparan sulfate proteoglycans remained constant. Therefore, chlorate decreased sulfation density on heparan sulfate chains by approximately 5-fold. In the same fractions, chlorate increased the median heparan sulfate Mr measured on Sephacryl S-300. Chlorate decreased the maximum binding of 125I-lipoprotein lipase to adipocytes by 4-fold, but no significant effects on the affinity constants were observed. Chlorate increased lipoprotein lipase secretion in a dose-dependent relationship up to 30 mM. Utilizing a pulse-chase protocol, it was shown that lipase synthesis in control and chlorate-treated cells was not significantly different and that the increased secretion could be accounted for by a decreased lipoprotein lipase degradation rate. In control cells 77 +/- 11% of the synthesized enzyme was degraded whereas in chlorate-treated cells degradation was reduced to 42 +/- 9% of the synthesized amount. The present study shows that decreased sulfation of heparan sulfate proteoglycans decreases the maximum binding of the lipase for the adipocyte cell surface. Consistent with the model that binding of lipoprotein lipase to cell surface heparan sulfate is required for lipase degradation, degradation is reduced in chlorate-treated cultures. In this report it is also shown that chlorate inhibits lipoprotein lipase sulfation and that desulfation of the enzyme has no effect on its catalytic efficiency or on its binding to cultured adipocytes.  相似文献   

19.
The metabolism of cell-associated proteoglycans, labeled in the glycosaminoglycan portion with 35SO2-4, was studied in normal skin fibroblasts (SL66 cells), NH4Cl-treated SL66 fibroblasts, and in I-cells derived from patients with mucolipidosis II. Kinetic data from label-chase experiments and gel filtration analysis of the molecular weight distribution of the radiolabeled glycosaminoglycans indicated that I-cells and NH4Cl-treated normal fibroblasts (a) internalize cell surface proteoglycans, (b) remove glycosaminoglycan chains from proteoglycan core proteins, and (c) degrade heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains via an endoglycosidic activity. These processes occur with rates comparable to those in normal fibroblasts. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the glycosaminoglycan chains of cell-surface proteoglycans are separated from the protein cores in a nonlysosomal compartment prior to the transport of these chains to lysosomes for degradation. These observations also raise the possibility that this early step in separation of glycosaminoglycan chains from protein cores may serve to regulate the levels of glycosaminoglycan-free core protein observed in various cells.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies have reported an increase in heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan (HSGAG) during skeletal muscle differentiation in culture. We have investigated this phenomenon further in relation to the heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) produced by myogenic cultures. Pulse-chase analysis indicated an approx. 3-fold increase in heparan sulfate synthesis in myotube cultures over that in proliferating or aligning myoblast cultures. Muscle fibroblast culture heparan sulfate synthesis was higher than that of myoblasts but was lower than myotubes. The turnover rates appeared to be the same for all stages of development, with a t1/2 of approx. 5 h. Enrichment for heparan sulfate by Sepharose CL-4B and DEAE-Sephacel chromatography indicated an increase in the hydrodynamic size of the proteoglycan produced by myotubes over that from myoblasts, with a shift in Kav from 0.14-0.19 to 0.07. Fibroblasts synthesized the smallest proteoglycan, with a Kav of 0.22. All of the proteoglycans contained similar sized glycosaminoglycan chains with an estimated molecular weight of 30,000-40,000. Localization of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan in myotube cultures by trypsin sensitivity indicated much of the intact proteoglycan to be closely associated with the cell surface, while internalized material appeared in a degraded form.  相似文献   

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